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Discover the best works from some of the world's most prestigious academic presses using University Press Scholarship Online

Discover thousands of outstanding academic books from Oxford University Press

Oxford Scholarship Online

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Access thousands of outstanding academic books from Oxford University Press

Spanning twenty subjects, and updated every month, Oxford Scholarship Online (OSO) is a vast online library, home to thousands of scholarly works from the world-renowned academic publishing list of Oxford University Press.

OSO brings together cutting-edge works from up-and-coming academics alongside those written by established and eminent names. This sophisticated, easy-to-use online platform offers quick and easy access to these books, and is an essential research tool for students, scholars, and academics.

Delivered by the University Press Scholarship Online (UPSO) platform

OSO is part of UPSO, a platform formed by Oxford University Press in partnership with other leading presses across the globe. With UPSO, you can easily search across tens of thousands of online works of scholarship from celebrated university presses, meaning you no longer have to sort through different resources to find the works you need.

Discover thousands of outstanding academic books from Oxford University Press

Oxford Scholarship Online

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Get started with Oxford Scholarship Online in under 10 minutes - let our product trainer take you on a tour of the main features and functionality of the site by watching our short instructional video.

Discover thousands of outstanding academic books from Oxford University Press

Oxford Scholarship Online

From Our Blog

The current cycle of primary elections has re-ignited old debates about the place of religion in American political life. Those candidates identified as evangelicals, such as Ted Cruz, are often represented as proposing a top-down reconstruction of American society, encouraging a 'moral minority' to take power in order to impose its expectations upon the culture at large.

2015 will probably go down as the 'year of migration', certainly in Europe. All the contradictions of globalisation were coming to a head. All the 'blowback' from Western interventions in the Maghreb and in the Levant were coming home.

There are times when it feels like Anthony Trollope's Irish novels might just as well have fallen overboard on the journey across the Irish Sea. Their disappearance would, for the better part of a century, have largely gone unnoticed and unlamented by readers and critics alike. Although interest has grown in recent times, the reality is that his Irish novels have never achieved more than qualified success, and occupy only a marginal place in his overall oeuvre.

Planet Earth doesn't have 'a temperature', one figure that says it all. There are oceans, landmasses, ice, the atmosphere, day and night, and seasons. Also, the temperature of Earth never gets to equilibrium: just as it's starting to warm up on the sunny-side, the sun gets 'turned off'; and just as it's starting to cool down on the night-side, the sun gets 'turned on'.

In order to hypothesize about the evolutionary origins of grammar, it is essential to rely on some theory or model of human grammars. Interestingly, scholars engaged in the theoretical study of grammar (syntacticians), particularly those working within the influential framework associated with linguist Noam Chomsky, have been reluctant to consider a gradualist, selection-based approach to grammar.

The Edwardian seer and futurologist, H. G. Wells, wondered whether aircrafts would ever be used commercially. He did the calculations and found that, yes, an airplane could be built and, yes, it would fly, but he proclaimed this would never be commercial.

Since the end of World War II, with the creation of the United Nations, the rules and structure of the traditional inter-state community have been changing. International law is increasingly shifting its focus from the state to the individual. It gradually lost the features of the classical era, placing greater emphasis on individuals, peoples, human beings as a whole, humanity, and future generations.

In my 22 years of teaching and writing about Arabic and Islamic Studies, I have probably heard every kind of naive and uninformed comment that can possibly be made in the West about Islam and Muslims. Such remarks are not necessarily all due to ill will; most of the time, they express bewilderment and stem from an inability to find accessible, informed sources that might begin to address such widespread public incomprehension. Add that to the almost daily barrage of news and media commentary concerning violence in the Middle East and South Asia, two regions viscerally connected with Islam and Muslims.

Today marks the forty-sixth anniversary of Prince Charles's formal investiture as Prince of Wales. At the time of this investiture, Charles himself was just shy of his twenty-first birthday, and in a video clip from that year, the young prince looks lean and fresh-faced in his suit, his elbows resting on his knees, his hands clasping and unclasping as he speaks to the importance of the investiture.

Argentina, 1976. On the afternoon of 3 August, Fr. James Weeks went to his room to take a nap while the five seminarians of the La Salette congregation living with him went to attend classes. Joan McCarthy, an American nun who was visiting them, stayed by the fireplace, knitting a scarf. They would have dinner together and discuss the next mission in Jujuy, a Northwestern province of Argentina, where McCarthy worked. Suddenly, a loud noise came from the door. Before McCarthy could reach it, a mob burst into the house. Around ten men spread all over the house, claiming to be the police, looking for weapons, guerrilla hideouts, and 'subversive fighters.'

Why are there missionaries in America? This is a Christian country!' 'We send missionaries out. We don't bring them in.' 'Missionaries in America'¦ I've never heard of such a thing.' These were some of the comments I encountered as I conducted research on the phenomena of missionaries in America. Despite these protests, missionaries from outside of the west do come to the United States, seeking to revitalize and evangelize Americans.

If you think about big public health challenges of our day -- the Ebola virus in Africa, the rising rates of suicide among the middle-aged in the United States, the HIV epidemic everywhere -- religions are playing a role. When I speak, I ask audiences, 'What was the first thing you heard about the Ebola crisis?', and they always say 'The missionaries who got it were taken to Emory.'

A ten-year anniversary seems an opportune time to take stock. Much has been said already about Oxford Scholarship Online (OSO) as it moves into its second decade, and let's cast the net a bit wider and focus not on OSO, per se, but on what the academic publishing industry has gotten right and what we've missed since OSO was in its infancy.

We all have a great deal of resources at our disposal most of the time, we look things up on our tablets and phones immediately, and are able to retrieve information on almost any topic at any time, almost anywhere. We've never been so connected globally. As a marketer, I'm intrigued and excited by engaging with this global community [...]

By David Skarbek On 11 April 2013, inmate Calvin Lee stabbed and beat inmate Javaughn Young to death in a Maryland prison. They were both members of the Bloods, a notorious gang active in the facility. The day before Lee killed Young, Young and an accomplice had stabbed Lee three times in the head and neck.

It may be hard for some of us here at Oxford University Press to imagine a life without Oxford Scholarship Online (OSO), but even though it has reached the grand old age of 10 years old, it is still only a baby in comparison with some of our other venerable institutions.

By Anne Hammerstad After a short lull in the late 2000s, global refugee numbers have risen dramatically. In 2013, a daily average of 32,200 people (up from 14,200 in 2011) fled conflict and persecution to seek protection elsewhere, within or outside the borders of their own country. On the current trajectory, 2014 will be even worse.

By Jon Balserak What is the self, and how is it formed? In the case of Calvin, we might be given a glimpse at an answer if we consider the context from which he came. Calvin was part of a society that was still profoundly memorial in character; he lived with the vestiges of that medieval culture that's discussed so brilliantly by Frances Yates and Mary Carruthers -- a society which committed classical and Christian corpora to remembrance and whose self-identity was, in a large part, shaped and informed by memory.

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Pride Month (LGBT Pride Month) is celebrated each year in the month of June to honour the 1969 Stonewall riots in Manhattan. This commemorative month recognizes the impact that lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals have had on history locally, nationally, and internationally.

By Eckart Woertz Syria and Egypt paradigmatically highlight the perils of food security in the Middle East. Oil exports of Egypt, the largest wheat importer of the world, ceased at the end of the 2000's. Generating enough foreign exchange for food procurement became more difficult and plans for more self-sufficiency have failed in the face of limited water and land resources.

By Avi Lifschitz We might have grown skeptical about our cultural legacy, but it is quite natural for us to assume that our own cognitive theories are the latest word when compared with those of our predecessors. Yet in some areas, the questions we are now asking are not too different from those posed some two-three centuries ago, if not earlier.